From personal experience, I totally agree about having a lousy non-art job than having a mediocre art job which just saps your passion out of what you love. Great point, Bobby!
Thank you Bobby for the talks. I am a Product designer but much of what is discussed here applies to my industry and much of the same mindset to succeed is pretty much the same. My dad was an excellent artist, he would have enjoyed your streaming. Thank you again.
Thank you for the video Bobby! Recently I started to pursue my true passion, all I want is to create art for the animation industry. Definitely I'm scared and currently working on this not art-related job but hope everything would turn out well in the future :) Hugs from Mexico
You have become really good with Z Brush Bobby, I love to see you improving while I learn from you to improve myself. Really nice talk, gold mine for advice :)
I'd love to give Zbrush a go- I'm pretty good at polymer clay sculpting and it looks like it handles similarly (after you've learned the quirks of the software), but the price tag makes it something you can't buy to "just experiment with". -Nerdarchist Ryan
I went to a great art school at age 18 but at the time I didn't know the basics so it didn't help me and I couldn't pass. Now I don't have money for a good art school so I'm at a crappy art program that really isn't the best, not the worst but not the best. I'm saving up money to go to a FANTASTIC art school now that I know the basics really well because I want to be, well, amazing! :D
Poor Wouter. I had some scarring experiences with my grade school art projects as well. When I was 5 I was painting the interior of a cave inspired by a trip to Meramec Cavern in Missouri. I spent quite a bit of time mixing just the right shade of maroon to catch something I had seen in the rock formations when a very annoyed teacher snatched away my paintbrush and announced I was "making a mess". It seems people don't understand artistic vision starts when you are small.
It's good Bobby is doing this, but I am finding that the questions are often the same, so maybe filter the questions, so that it doesn't become repetative and then uninteresting.
1:04:00 my parents.. actually my grandma and aunt. they looked at my drawings and said that i will never become an artist. basically all my rest life is me trying to prove to myself the opposite :) Thanks Bobby. great interview as usual
There should be a solidarity to where we should be going. we all have goals. Have to the practice books for sketching. Then getting your art out there via social media, network. I have the practice pieces of work then I have pieces that I go back to to refine.
Also, if you can attend conventions either in the area or relevant to your industry, you can make great connections with others that you can continue online as well. I would wholly recommend CTN (coming up in November) if you haven't already heard of it. It's great to attend, but just as great to volunteer for, because the other volunteers are students/pros in the animation/film industry as well. There's something to be said about the camaraderie built when you work for something you love.
Yup, he's super awesome- and Steve Lichman recently got a shout-out on Geek & Sundry's Signal Boost, so I hope even more people check him out. -Nerdarchist Ryan
In some environments it is not possible to put yourself in the position of your boss... You will have soon a boss (higher than you in position) that is opposing you.... It's not as easy as that. Do it with balance. A bit.
From personal experience, I totally agree about having a lousy non-art job than having a mediocre art job which just saps your passion out of what you love. Great point, Bobby!
Thank you Bobby for the talks. I am a Product designer but much of what is discussed here applies to my industry and much of the same mindset to succeed is pretty much the same. My dad was an excellent artist, he would have enjoyed your streaming. Thank you again.
listening to this while drawing, best feeling ever.
Thank you for the video Bobby! Recently I started to pursue my true passion, all I want is to create art for the animation industry. Definitely I'm scared and currently working on this not art-related job but hope everything would turn out well in the future :) Hugs from Mexico
You have become really good with Z Brush Bobby, I love to see you improving while I learn from you to improve myself. Really nice talk, gold mine for advice :)
I'm enjoying this so much. Doodling while listening your video. Quality Saturday night activity :D
Love you Chiu, only recently found the channel but damn am i gonna be on this stuff every time you upload!
hey thanks so much Luke!
Awesome video. ^ - ^ Glad I found this channel.
the first question is so me, thats really my problem right now, thank you so much bobby
I'd love to give Zbrush a go- I'm pretty good at polymer clay sculpting and it looks like it handles similarly (after you've learned the quirks of the software), but the price tag makes it something you can't buy to "just experiment with". -Nerdarchist Ryan
I went to a great art school at age 18 but at the time I didn't know the basics so it didn't help me and I couldn't pass. Now I don't have money for a good art school so I'm at a crappy art program that really isn't the best, not the worst but not the best. I'm saving up money to go to a FANTASTIC art school now that I know the basics really well because I want to be, well, amazing! :D
Good job on your Zbrush skills Bobby! You're really getting into it!
Poor Wouter. I had some scarring experiences with my grade school art projects as well. When I was 5 I was painting the interior of a cave inspired by a trip to Meramec Cavern in Missouri. I spent quite a bit of time mixing just the right shade of maroon to catch something I had seen in the rock formations when a very annoyed teacher snatched away my paintbrush and announced I was "making a mess". It seems people don't understand artistic vision starts when you are small.
great video, I'm excited for dave next week!
Great interview. Also you picking up Zbrush and adding it to your workflow has led me taking the leap of fate and buying Zbrush Core. ;-)
❤Thanks for the advice on just give up later than the old version you.
Wonder what’s the name of the guest? His character design is pretty!
The guest is Wouter Tulp! He's an incredible artist and Schoolism instructor😊 instagram.com/woutertulp/?hl=en
~S
Really awesome talk,it's very helpful,thanks! awesome art by bobby👌🏻❤
Glad you liked it Rathod!
It's good Bobby is doing this, but I am finding that the questions are often the same, so maybe filter the questions, so that it doesn't become repetative and then uninteresting.
so cool guys ...that tiger is so good Bobby!
1:04:00 my parents.. actually my grandma and aunt. they looked at my drawings and said that i will never become an artist. basically all my rest life is me trying to prove to myself the opposite :) Thanks Bobby. great interview as usual
You can be whatever you want only believe in yourself
"I don't want to be homeless, so therefore I will make it happen" - So funny.
is there any videos about how to pick skin colours?
thanks
There should be a solidarity to where we should be going. we all have goals. Have to the practice books for sketching. Then getting your art out there via social media, network. I have the practice pieces of work then I have pieces that I go back to to refine.
Do you do photography, Bobby?
Are these still live? Been trying to catch one but I can't find what time it would be at
Hello men can u do a tutorial about render compositing c:
yay
❤️❤️
❤️❤️❤️
~S
anyone know good way to meet other artists, if you don't live in a populated area?
Thank you. Okay I will try to do that.
Also, if you can attend conventions either in the area or relevant to your industry, you can make great connections with others that you can continue online as well. I would wholly recommend CTN (coming up in November) if you haven't already heard of it. It's great to attend, but just as great to volunteer for, because the other volunteers are students/pros in the animation/film industry as well. There's something to be said about the camaraderie built when you work for something you love.
Holly fuckin hell Dave Rapoza is just the best of all living artists
Yup, he's super awesome- and Steve Lichman recently got a shout-out on Geek & Sundry's Signal Boost, so I hope even more people check him out. -Nerdarchist Ryan
In some environments it is not possible to put yourself in the position of your boss... You will have soon a boss (higher than you in position) that is opposing you.... It's not as easy as that. Do it with balance. A bit.
z-brush?
Yea, he's using Zbrush.
Two sketchbooks a week...that's insane. Your arm will give out...unless it's just scribbles.
Unless the sketchbooks are super tiny... XD It depends on the size, pages, and time invested. I am sure i am missing something.